China Evergrande liquidators seek $8.4B from accounting firm PwC in Hong Kong lawsuit – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
Hong Kong – Liquidators appointed to wind up China Evergrande have asked a local court to order accounting firm PwC to pay 57 billion yuan, or roughly $8.4 billion, for alleged shortcomings in its audit work. The claim targets PwC International, its Hong Kong unit and the firm’s mainland China operations. A judge has yet to rule on the request, which was outlined during a hearing on Monday.
The Claim Centers on Audit Shortcomings
The liquidators argue that PwC failed to meet professional standards while reviewing Evergrande’s financial statements in the years before the developer’s collapse. They are seeking the large sum to help repay creditors who lost money when the company defaulted. Court records show the proceedings focus on negligence rather than any admission of wrongdoing by the auditors.
Evergrande once ranked among China’s biggest property firms, yet its 2021 default exposed more than $300 billion in liabilities and set off a broader crisis in the sector. Sales and prices have remained weak since then, leaving many projects unfinished and investors exposed. The liquidators, appointed after a Hong Kong judge ordered liquidation in early 2024, view the lawsuit as one route to recover funds.
Earlier Penalties Highlight Long-Running Concerns
Regulators in Hong Kong announced last month that PwC would pay HK$1.3 billion, or about $166 million, in fines and compensation tied to its Evergrande audits. Mainland Chinese authorities separately imposed a 441 million yuan, or $62 million, penalty in September 2024. Those actions cited breaches of professional duties and noted that Evergrande had overstated revenue by roughly $80 billion in its 2019 and 2020 results.
PwC responded at the time by acknowledging that its work on the audits “fell well below our high expectations and the expectations of our stakeholders.” The firm added that it had already introduced accountability and remediation steps. No further details on those measures were provided in court filings released so far.
Founder’s Guilty Plea Adds to the Fallout
Evergrande’s founder, Hui Ka Yan, pleaded guilty in April to charges that included fraud and bribery in mainland China. The admission came months after the company’s liquidation order and underscored the scale of the problems that regulators and creditors continue to examine. Liquidators have said they will pursue every available avenue to maximize returns for those owed money.
The current lawsuit remains at an early stage, with no timetable yet set for a full trial or settlement talks. Observers note that similar claims against auditors in large corporate failures can take years to resolve, especially when multiple jurisdictions are involved.
What Creditors Stand to Gain
Any recovery from PwC would flow directly to Evergrande’s creditors, many of whom have waited years for partial repayment. The property sector’s ongoing slump means fresh capital remains scarce, making even partial success in the case potentially significant. Liquidators have not disclosed how much they expect to collect if the claim succeeds.
Legal experts following the case say the outcome could influence how auditors approach high-risk clients in China and elsewhere. For now, the focus stays on the Hong Kong proceedings and the liquidators’ effort to close one chapter of the Evergrande saga.
